An e-commerce without narrative is just an online catalog.
Walk through any winery, a heritage hotel lobby, or a design store filled with handmade objects, and you’ll notice something: the atmosphere does half the work. The textures, the tone of voice, the way a host explains where something comes from… it all builds a story.
Now open their website. Often, what you’ll find is a digital catalog: polished photos, product descriptions, maybe a tagline or two. Useful, yes. Memorable, rarely.
Why narrative matters more than features
E-commerce without narrative is like a dining room without conversation. It shows what’s on the table, but it doesn’t tell you why you’re there, there is zero experience. For lifestyle brands: wine, aperitifs, boutique hotels, home objects, fashion… this gap is where sales get stuck. Clients are buying more than items or bookings; they’re buying moments, rituals, belonging.
A narrative framework in e-commerce means that:
The website isn’t just a shop; it’s an introduction to the brand’s worldview.
Each page reinforces the same invitation: “Here’s how life feels with us.”
Product copy becomes context: what this bottle carries to your table, what this chair changes about your evening, what this weekend at our hotel opens in you.
What happens without it (without narrative)
When the story is missing, departments fill the gap with their own voices. Marketing pushes discounts, product teams write technical copy, hospitality leans on aspirational imagery. Nothing wrong with any of those, but without a shared frame, the brand starts to sound fractured. And fractured brands fade into noise.
What narrative brings back
Narrative in e-commerce is less about adjectives, more about alignment. It means:
A homepage that connects emotionally with your client, makes them feel part of your world and names what you both share, creates a clan, a togetherness feeling.
Category pages that group products by rituals, not just SKUs.
Emails that feel like conversations, not campaigns.
A consistent tone from checkout to confirmation, so clients feel guided, not processed.
Where to begin
Just don’t start with SEO keywords or seasonal offers. You start by asking:
What do people actually experience when they use, taste, or stay with us?
What language feels true to our culture, not borrowed from competitors?
What story do we want every part of the brand, from HR to e-com, to reinforce?
Once those answers are clear, SEO & GEO becomes easier, not harder. Search and generated engines favor coherence, consistency, and context. Story isn’t decoration, it’s strategy.
The quiet advantage
The brands that invest in narrative don’t need to shout. Their e-commerce hosts, it doesn’t feel like a catalogue, but like an experience. It becomes a digital reflection of the space people already love in person. And in a world of endless catalogs, that’s what stands out: a site that feels less like a store, more like a home.
Human Is Not a Trend
Why humanizing your brand is the real digital strategy
There’s a moment I always look for in client sessions.
It’s not when the deck is done, or when the strategy clicks.
It’s when someone pauses mid-sentence and says,
“Wait — that actually sounds like us.”
That moment? That’s the brand speaking human again.
We hear a lot about being authentic online.
But being human isn’t a strategy.
It’s a condition. It’s already there, in the values, the quirks, the side conversations, the unsent drafts.
What we forget in digital spaces is that brand-building isn’t a performance. It’s a relationship. And relationships need tone. They need rhythm. They need care. And most important, they need to give, not just take.
When we talk about “humanizing” a brand at Off-Normal, we’re not talking about making it cute, or casual, or quirky.
We’re talking about making it recognizable. Relatable. Real. Something people can feel, even when they don’t have the words for it.
Because clarity is useful, but feeling is what people remember.
So what does a human brand sound like?
It sounds like someone who knows their own story.
It sounds like care taken in the details.
It sounds like a team that’s aligned, not just in what they say, but how they say it.
It sounds like the founder, without needing to be about the founder.
It sounds like something you’d want to read even if it wasn’t trying to sell you anything.
Humanizing your brand is not the opposite of being strategic.
It is the strategy, when what you’re building is meant to last.
And in a digital world where everything is templated, automated, and optimized, what makes you feel different… is the part that still sounds like someone meant it.
by @flothebrandhumanizer